Posted: July 25, 2008

A hot connection with spin

(Nanowerk News) Chirality, or handedness—where an object cannot be superimposed on its mirror image—is found in many physical systems. In the case of electron spin—the smallest magnetic field generated by an electron—the chirality shown by some compounds can be quantified by the solid angle subtended by three nearby spins, and can be controlled by the application of a magnetic field.
spin chirality
Schematic representation of spin chirality. Reversing one of the spins (right) results in reversing the spin chirality. (Image: RIKEN)
Shigeki Onoda from the RIKEN’s Advanced Science Institute (formerly the Discovery Research Institute), Wako, and colleagues from Japan and Hungary have studied the effect of spin chirality on the transport properties in solid-state materials ("Anomalous Nernst Effects in Pyrochlore Molybdates with Spin Chirality"). Spin chirality has been shown to have an effect on other transport properties, for example in the so-called anomalous Hall effects, in which no temperature gradient is involved ("Spin chirality, Berry phase, and anomalous Hall effect in a frustrated ferromagnet").
“Spin chirality bears a fictitious magnetic field and bends the electron motion driven by the temperature gradient, [thus] introducing a transverse current,” explains Onoda. “The direction in which the electron motion is bent depends on the sign of the spin chirality.”
In their study, the researchers focussed on whether spin chirality influences the Nernst effect, which describes the generation of an electric current in the direction perpendicular to that of a temperature gradient.
Onoda and colleagues studied a series of compounds named pyrochlore molybdates. Because some members of this family show spin chirality and others do not, they could make direct comparisons.
The comparisons between results on different compounds highlighted the effect of the spin chirality. Specifically, compounds with spin chirality showed an anomalous Nernst effect in a specific temperature range (20–30 K (-253.15– -243.15 °C)), while a compound with no spin chirality showed no effect.
The importance of the result goes beyond the specific case of the class of materials studied. “The observation of this fundamental phenomenon has revealed that a fairly large fictitious magnetic field can be generated in materials by controlling the low-energy degrees of freedom of the spin chirality,” says Onoda. “The sign of the spin chirality controls that of the transverse heat/electric current. This is unlike the usual cases of Nernst effects, where [the sign of the transverse current] is exclusively determined by that of the temperature gradient and the applied magnetic field or the magnetization in particular materials.” According to the researchers, their study reveals that spin chirality is really a new and promising basic quantity in electron transport phenomena.
Source: RIKEN